As for the rest of the world,
here's the scoreboard as of 6:47 a.m. ET:

The Japanese yen is down 0.3% at 100.20 per
dollar. "Our base case is that the recent strengthening of the
yen will result in a further moderation in inflation
excluding fresh food and energy towards zero," argued Capital
Economics' Marcel Thieliant in commentary. "However, the
magnitude of recent exchange rate movements has been so
large that we can’t exclude a brief return to
negative underlying inflation. For the Bank of Japan, this
can only add pressure to do more."

The Russian ruble is lower by 0.5% at
63.9508 per dollar.
Bloomberg's Ksenia Galouchko noted that the currency's
slide comes amid Friday's slight dip in oil prices, as well as
growing investor concern over the tensions with Ukraine.

The euro is weaker by 0.3% at
1.1324 against the dollar. Earlier, German PPI
surprised on the upside, rising 0.2% month-over-month in July,
above estimates of 0.1%.